Chicago Sun-Times

SHORT AND SWEET 16

With abbreviate­d season, MLB adds six teams to playoff format

- BY RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK — MLB and the players’ union agreed Thursday to expand the playoffs from 10 teams to 16 for the pandemic-delayed season, a decision that makes it likely teams with losing records will reach the postseason.

The agreement was reached hours before the season opener between the Yankees and World Series champion Nationals. The deal applied only for 2020 and included a surprise benefittin­g the Yankees the most: The collection of baseball’s luxury tax will be suspended this year, a person familiar with the details told the Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because no announceme­nt was made.

Sixteen of the 30 teams will advance to a best-of-three first round: the first- and second-place teams in every division and the next two clubs by winning percentage in each league. Those winners move on to the best-of-five Division Series, where the usual format resumes. The final four teams are in best-of-seven League Championsh­ip Series, and the pennant winners meet in the best-of-seven World Series.

“It’s such a unique season, why not try a little something different and make it as exciting as possible,” said Rockies shortstop Trevor Story, whose team has never won a World Series title. “I know it’s going to be such a sprint with the 60game season; adding more playoff teams will just add to the fire and the excitement and the fandom around the game. Anything can happen in a 60-game season. I’m all for it.”

In each league, the division winners will be seeded 1-3, the secondplac­e teams 4-6 and the teams with the next two best records 7-8, which means up to four teams in one division could be in the postseason. The first-round pairings will be 1 vs. 8, 2-7, 3-6 and 4-5.

The higher seed in the first round will host all games from Sept. 29 to Oct. 2.

“This season will be a sprint to a new format that will allow more fans to experience playoff baseball,” commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement.

Tiebreaker games, which have produced famous home runs by

Bobby Thomson and Bucky Dent, are eliminated. Ties would be broken by head-to-head record, followed by better record within a team’s division and record in the last 20 games within the division. If still tied, the standard would be last 21 games within a division, then 22, etc.

Teams could finish the regular season with differing games played; regular-season postponeme­nts would be made up at Manfred’s discretion.

As part of the deal, MLB agreed to guarantee a postseason pool that would be $50 million: $20 million in the first round and $10 million for each additional round. The postseason pool usually is made up of ticket money from the postseason, but baseball anticipate­s playing the entire year in empty ballparks because of the coronaviru­s.

“The opportunit­y to add playoff games in this already-abbreviate­d season makes sense for fans, the league and players,” union head Tony Clark said in a statement. “We hope it will result in highly competitiv­e pennant races as well as exciting additional playoff games to the benefit of the industry.”

ESPN was given rights to seven of eight first-round series and TBS the other for no additional money as a makeup for missed games. ESPN and TBS were to have split the two wild-card games in the original format.

The change means 53% of the 30 teams reach the playoffs. If eight teams qualified for the playoffs in each league from 1995 through 2019, 46 teams at or below .500 would have made it, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, an average of just under two per season.

Those teams included 25 from the American League.

There would have been only three seasons in which all playoff teams would have had winning records, Elias said: 2000, 2003 and 2009.

“It would be a great way to keep fan bases engaged throughout the entire season,” Brewers star Christian Yelich said. “You’d have a really tight race all the way down to the last day of the season. I think there’d be a lot of teams in it within a game or two of each other going into that final day.”

 ?? MORRY GASH/AP ?? Brewers star Christian Yelich says the additional playoff berths will be a great way to keep fan bases engaged throughout the season.
MORRY GASH/AP Brewers star Christian Yelich says the additional playoff berths will be a great way to keep fan bases engaged throughout the season.

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